All are welcome to the Springfield Town Library at 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 13. Using live and recorded music, Mark Greenberg will survey American labor songs from the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution, through the Wobblies, and into the coal wars of the 1930.
The event celebrates the 2018 Vermont Reads title "Bread and Roses, Too," by Katherine Paterson, through song.
For centuries, working people have used songs to express protest and hope and as an organizing tool. In the U.S., the I.W.W (or Wobblies), which led the 1912 Bread and Roses strike, was especially known for its rousing and satirical songs, including the anthemic “Solidarity Forever.”
Greenberg is an educator, writer, musician, and media producer. He has taught at Goddard College and the University of Vermont and produced award-winning recordings and radio and video documentaries. He wrote for the JVC-Smithsonian Folkways Video Anthologies of Music and Dance of the Americas, Europe, and Africa and has recorded music by recent immigrants and refugees in the state for the Vermont Folklife Center’s New Neighbors project.
In related news, Paterson, the book's author, will be speaking at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 26 at the Springfield High School Auditorium. Free copies of Paterson’s book will be available at the library as long as supplies last.
"Bread and Roses, Too" is a novel of historical fiction that tells the story of the 1912 “Bread and Roses” strike in the Lawrence, Massachusetts textile mills through the eyes of an Italian-American girl and a runaway boy. The novel relates the journey of Rosa, who, along with Jake and other children, are sent temporarily out of harm’s way to foster families in Barre, Vermont, as children actually were during the strike.
This program is sponsored by the Friends of the Springfield Town Library, Springfield Town Library, Vermont Humanities Council, Springfield Unitarian Universalist Congregation, Springfield Art and Historical Society, and the Springfield Co-op. It is free, accessible to all people, and open to the public.
www.vermonthumanities.org
Most people don't realize how many people fought, and died, to give them better pay and working conditions. They take it for granted, or think they did it themselves. Without Unions, there would be no minimum wage, no eight hour day, no overtime, no workplace safety laws. There are fools who think they can live without these things. I don't pity them, they'll get what they deserve. I feel only for those who were smart enough to know better, and were out-voted.
ReplyDeleteWhy don't they have this gathering at the UE218 hall?
ReplyDeleteThere's a union hall in Springfield??????
DeleteI think Goldman owns it.
DeleteI'm guessing 8:53 isn't from around here.
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